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YESTERDAY'S FESTIVITIES

... qfrlough 4dldgnid-a~ddre~sses we+rer deivreby tli :qyJl~i* ;oI Be' S,,rw . n>l s ti,,, .ndl fl;ls~t . r.te Mfr ]Fleming, speaking on the feedero f made a very vigorous attack oil the e a mean, great and semal, but e th believed that the atusemeh spued ...

BEFORE VICKSBURG

... feet There spread a pool of bright youu.g blood. Shocked at his doleful case, Sherman cried, Halt! froetefaco! Who are you ? Speak, my gallant boy ! A drummer, Sir, Fifty-fifth Miuois. Are you not hit? That's nothing. Only send hocusecartridges: our ...

LITERATURE

... oylols,1songsiid. ballads. It is. impossible- to speak ,the trmth about,;that blodyhus ,which fell at the6evolution, ,n, its , withouf giviig,'offeic' to. suchepersons. Iti equalr impossible to sp'eak the truth abou tigreit cfnten, ing of our Nlorious ...

CUTTINGS FROM THE MAGAZINES

... forezitic~skill, but~ soinething of judicial spirt. His yJ cotious, bu never diffuse br verbose; he was nsver carriedlaaay '(so to speak) by his eloquence; he, never seeuiftR sayia word too mauch. His choice of wzordswas lways rqmarkably correct; and his diction ...

LITERATURE

... forecastle' head and en-aged in conversa- tion nearly an hour. Mr H'uttlestone, with whom' ,he was donversing, ?? had beej speaking of-the theory 'of the nitarians, that Christ -was merely hum-an, , when MxrMasson said, JI could not rest in the joyfu~l ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... be theirc motto; and they r 'eS appear to attach no other meaning to the word asurgeon $ than simply something to eat: I speak by experience. As I ac- to physic, nothing seems to come wrong to them. If I avy patients or shore were only half as fond of ...

LITERATURE

... forms cannot be identified with the direct energies of an all-pervading willit is uuphiloso. pshical, the author submits, to speak as if the forces of nature were separate from the power of the Creator. To discover the cause is not to exclude thelidea of ...

WORKING MEN'S EXCURSION TO THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... believes that accsmniao dateo-n c,,id thus lbe obtained as ?? Ss r! wveek for each per-on, but he is not nrepamo aq yet to speak positively on this pnint. ?? p''loPoLES to return to Paris in March for the pur',o(.e of leauming exactly the nature of the ...

LITERATURE

... dissemin- oi nate among all classes, and gain for the science of Chemistry nti the popularity it enjoys-limited, comparatively speaking, though it ic-than this branch of Chambers's Educationsl c Course. Its object is strictly elementary, its purpose being ...

THE MORMON THEATRE—BRIGHAM YOUNG'S DAUGHTERS

... western America, that she always addressed her husband by his baptismal name of Hiram. Ameri- can ladies almost everywhere speak to their hus- bands as Mr Jones and Mr Smith, not as William and George.The perils of a double alliance with the Uormon pope ...

GLASGOW INSTITUTE OF THR FINE-ARTS

... to-night in a very favourable view. It does not require a knowledge of French or German or Italian to appreciate them, for they speak in the language of nature; and every one can read the story which they telL (Applause.) I believe it is little more than a ...

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW

... o aye visited withou' inercy. e.As readers wfil have bad eaough o1 these fruitful topics b this time, we pass tlteii by to spea'k of 'theii otheil rtilt SimEt of them, it iid' be tionifeseed, are solid,inot todaj I. heavy'reading. Tereis'an essay on the ...